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How Afghan war showed limits of U.S. military power
By ROBERT BURNS WASHINGTON©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
15 Comments
Commodore Perry
The US easily could have stabilized Afghanistan if it wanted to, but instead it tried to bandage the new wounds that kept arising almost daily.
Trump was right to not trust Afghanistan's leader.
This current whispering administration has no established Afghanistan policy, and so there will be chaos that will be "reacted" too.
1glenn
"Those who do not learn from history are condemned to repeat it."
Anyone remember the wars in Southeast Asia? What did those wars accomplish? Over a million dead Vietnamese, almost 60,000 dead Americans, for what? Today, when I go shopping, some of the best shirts are imported from our former enemy, Vietnam. Is that what we fought a war for?
It is not that I like or admire the Taliban, but why did we attack them? Because they did not partake in the attacks on us on 9/11? Because they offered to try Osama bin Laden in one of their courts, instead of one of ours? Or was it a calculated attempt to make Pres. Bush look like a competent leader?
As for the 45th US President, any sentence with the words "Trump was right....." in it is automatically suspect, to say the least.
Desert Tortoise
The US lost Afghanistan the day it invaded Iraq. If the US had committed the resources to Afghanistan it devoted to Iraq the US would not be in this current situation and the whole of the Middle East would be a lot more calm than it is today. Invading Iraq sucked up the resources needed to win in Afghanistan and worse, opened a Pandora's box of ethnic warfare in the rest of the Middle East.
Danielsan
Had the US gone all out and totally neutralized the opposition, this war could have been over in months.
But military strategy is dictated not by strategists, but by war profiteers who profit from arms sales and logistic support services.
Modern day wars are not fought for flag, country, or ideals but for the profit of elite arms dealers who control the narrative and hire lobbyists to ensure legislative approval.
M3M3M3
This is precisely why you failed. You still don't seem to understand that there was never an enemy capable of being defeated. The Taliban were an honest reflection of the traditional Islamic tribal values that most Afghans (especially in rural areas) still wish to live by. Unless you're prepared to genocide the majority of Afghans, the Taliban will always reconstitute and reassert itself in some form or another.
The mistake America made was to assume that the Taliban leadership were a parasitic elite hated by ordinary people that wouldn't be missed if they were decapitated in an airstrike. In otherwords, Americans wrongly assumed that Afghanistan was just like America.
itsonlyrocknroll
Karl Eikenberry, a retired Army lieutenant general with a rare combination of high-level military and diplomatic experience in Afghanistan, said the U.S. military initially balked at an open-ended mission of nation-building in an impoverished country traumatized by decades of civil war.
“But it warmed to the task,” he said, and the United States became further entangled as it pursued a military strategy not informed by realistic policy debates in Washington about what outcome was achievable and at what cost.
By numbers alone, the costs were enormous. Tens of thousands of Afghan government forces and civilians were killed. The United States lost more than 2,440 troops, and the allies lost more than 1,100. The U.S. spent hundreds of billions, and even after the withdrawal, the Biden administration plans to ask Congress to spend billions more in support of Afghan soldiers — even to continue paying their salaries.
Religious extremism , cultivated over centuries, has sufferance, they are astute at play the waiting game.
They hid in the shadows, for this current US administration its back to square one.
Sven Asai
That is completely wrong. The U.S. military power is still enormous and in principle without any limits. The ‘only’ problems in Afghanistan were, that they had no strategy for going in, no strategy at all while having been there for 20 years and also no strategy for what is to do now , the time after having almost completely gone out. In fact that possible mission success was missed right from the beginning.
itsonlyrocknroll
This really should have served as a warning for what was to come.......
The Soviet War in Afghanistan, 1979 - 1989
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2014/08/the-soviet-war-in-afghanistan-1979-1989/100786/
Commodore Perry
How Afghan war showed limits of U.S. military power
In retrospect, this title is misleading. US military power is unsurpassed by any other country. It keeps China, Russia, North Korea, Iran etc, in check. It is what made the world stand up extra straight when Trump was in office, because for the first time in a long time we had a power leader in charge of that military power.
The problem in Afghanistan was the US limited itself as to how it used that power.
We should have used tactical nuclear weapons, plain and simple.
1glennToday 08:58 am JST
Totally agree CRT inspired libs would think this.
Commodore Perry
P. SmithToday 05:58 pm JST
Wrong. It's called reading comprehension.
And as I mentioned way back, I was there.
No, not true entirely. As mentioned, I was there dude--saw it with my own eyes and participated with my own body. Taliban would just cross over into Pakistan at key stages. Maybe 5-6 years ago Pakistan tried to check these crossings with the Durand line or whatever; was out then so didn't care.
Anyone who understands CRT and is still pro-CRT--well, CNN has an open guest seat available right between AOC and Omar.
Commodore Perry
P. SmithToday 06:19 pm JST
Who is struggling? Because I didn't write that, Hilarious!
Iraq too bud. Your comment would have been more relevant concerning that country btw. Go look at my past posts.
You should.
It's wrong. Think differently? AOC and Omar are waiting for you.
Commodore Perry
P. SmithToday 07:06 pm JST
That's my point--that is how Afghanistan is defined.